Community/Feral Cat TNR

Our Clinic offers low-cost spay/neuter surgeries and vaccinations for community cats who are trapped in Vanderburgh and surrounding counties. It is our goal to humanely decrease the number of unwanted cats & kittens in our community.

What is a Community Cat?

“Community Cat” is used to describe any free-roaming, outdoor cat. They are often referred to as “feral” cats even though some are not truly feral. Some community cats are not socialized with people, while others are friendly and may have been lost or abandoned by their previous families. Because they live outside, and are oftentimes fed and cared for by one or more neighbors, they’re called “community cats.” Community cats are protected under the City of Evansville Animal Control Ordinanceas of July 2015.

Trap the cat and bring it to us. (We cannot provide trapping services or pick up trapped cats.)

For the safety of the cat and our staff, all cats must arrive in a humane live-release trap. VHS has traps available to rent for a $60 refundable cash deposit, or you can purchase your own from any farm supply or pet store and use it. Each cat must be in its own individual trap.

Withhold food on the morning of surgery, but continue to provide fresh water.

Bring up to 2 trapped community cats in on Tuesday or Wednesday mornings between 8:00 am – 10:00 am with no appointment needed. Bringing more than 2 cats at once requires an appointment. (Request an appointment here.)

All patients will receive spay/neuter surgery, a rabies vaccination, and an FVRCP vaccination depending on age. Cats’ left ears will be tipped for future identification. Requesting that cats’ ears not be tipped will disqualify them from the program.

Patients are held for one night after surgery to recover. Pickup is at 7:30 am the day after surgery so they can be returned to their community.

Cats choose their territories for a variety of reasons. Usually it’s because of a food source or the shelter an area provides. Removing cats doesn’t address whatever drew the cats to the area in the first place, so new cats will move in or the remaining cats will breed again to capacity. It is a vacuum effect. We’ve seen communities that have spent lots of taxpayer money rounding up and euthanizing or relocating all the cats, only to have a new group move in a year or two later and continue producing more unwanted kittens.

The Vanderburgh Humane Society Davidson Rausch Low-Cost Spay & Neuter Clinic adheres to the standards for the Spay/Neuter Medical Care Guidelines developed in 2008, and updated in 2016, by the Association of Shelter Veterinarians’ Veterinary Task Force to Advance Spay/Neuter.